emerald regoa Daily Emerald la pnUiahed Monday throagh Friday daring the nolle** year L. 15 to Jane 3. except Nor. 16, 36 through 30, Dee. 7 through 9. 11 through Jan. 4, through 10, 13 through 39, May 3, and 31 through June 3, with Uauea on Nor. 31, ind May .8, by the Student Publication*-Board of the University of Oregon. En pecond clasa matter at the poet office, Eugene, Oregon. Subscription ratea: $5 per iTj $2 per term. » at expressed on the editorial page are those of die writer and do not pretend to the opinion# of the ASUO or of the University. Unsigned editorials are written by ; initialed editorials by the associate editors. AL KARS, Editor BILL BRANDSNESS, Business Manager PAT GILDEA, ELSIE SCHILLER, Associate Editors KITTY FRASER. LAURA STURGES, Editorial Assistants JACKIE WARD ELL, Managing Editor JOE GARDNER, News Editor SAM VAHE-Y, Sports Editor Chief Makeup Editor: Paul Keefe Chief Night Editor: Anne Hill Asst. .Managing Editors: Len Calvert, Bob Patterson Congestion for a Day Lines, confusion and congestion won’t end with Christmas shopping for the Oregon student. He'll have it all over again when he completes registration for winter term, Jan. 4, along >vith about 3800 other students. Under the new system of pre-registration the most a stu dent can do is work out a study program and have it signed by his adviser. The lines will form Jan. 4 as students wait to pick up regis tration materials and sign for classes. The confusion and con gestion will be as apparent as the lines form in this first attempt in seven*years to change the pre-registration set up. A fine for late registration after Jan. 4 should guarantee an all-time high in class attendance for the first days of a new term. The old system of completing registration before vaca tion enabled the student to possibly enjoy a few days extra with no fine and a smug knowledge he was missing nothing but course introduction lectures. On the advising side of the new system we can see some def inite benefits for the student. For once, the different needs of individual students have been recognized. Some need confer ences to map out study programs and this can be done leisurely during the last two weeks of fall term. Other students, with no questions, can have their programs signed in the Nov. 30 meet ings without conferences. This will enable the adviser to give more time to the student who does need help. The longer, spaced-out advising period appeals to us, but the “everyone get registered in one day” angle is what raises questions. Even with the decreased enrollment, will facilities be large enough to handle the entire student body registering at one time? And will everyone be able to complete registration in one day? We’d like to see a system that combined the longer advising period with a registering process that is not so rushed.—(P.G). A Look at the Look Here’s an excerpt from the OSC Barometer’s “A Look at the Campus” column, written by Barometer Editor Dick Davis: “Ticket price for the Oregon game is a robust two bucks apiece for ‘big spender’ Oregon State students ... and for this two dollars we get prize seats in the end zone . . . could be that our sporting cousins from Eugene City College figure that if they make the deal bad enough, nobody’ll come down and molest their goal posts or blast the ‘O’ . . . either that’s the reason or they’ve decided that no price is too high to pay for the privilege of watching George the General go through a few of his press-clipping antics . . . why watch at all when you can get such a good run-down in the papers . . the Oregons had fifty-yard line spots at Multnomah Stadium last fall for our transplanted Civil War, but they don’t seem to hot to reciprocate.” Too bad about the Barometer, but it ought to take a look back over the past years, and compare with the present. Oregon students have been moved about 15 yards away from the 50yard line toward the south goal line this year to make room for more donor seats- on the east side and to allow visiting school students to sit on the east side. OSC’s contingent of students is too big to sit in that section, however, so they sit in the end zone. They have about 1000 seats of good position and under cover, but those undoubtedly are sold to Beaver club and like re cipients — and that’s OSC’s choice, not ours. Oregon students sat on the 50-yard line in Multnomah sta dium, but where did they sit when the Beavers played their home games at Bell Field? In the end zone. And we don’t think that OSC’s home game with Oregon was moved to Portland so that the UO students could have good seats. And where will Oregon students sit in Parker Stadium? Most likely in the end zone. We leave the rest to George the General and the army, to perform their press-clippihg antics for the benefit of the Bea vers. , •. L i —A Day at the Zoo— It Was the Night of the House Dance, And She Was Having a Swell Time by Bob Funk Emerald Columniat He had asked her to the house dance. She had accepted with something quite closely akin to alacrity. It was, she felt, an op portunity to learn more about ___— men. It was, fur 'thermore, an op f portunity (and an ah so rare ;One) for men to learn more about • her. Men were, I'she felt, a minor ity group; she saw so few of them. She decid [ed that this was one minority group that she would be exceedingly tolerant of. During the week she had had a number of pleasant visions in anticipation of the dance.' In one she was wearing the gold lame evening gown with chin chilla trim. The gown was off the-shoulder, off-the-back, and slit up one side. In this vision she was, to adopt the veraac ular, Melted. He wan beside her saying “Ava (somehow her name had become Ava), how can you be so cruel. Please al low me to kiss you, Ava.” The vision ended very simply as she allowed him to kiss her. In another dream he clutched her in a wild embrace, and be fore she knew quite what had happened, he had slipped an en gagement ring on her finger. In these vision and many more, he was strong, somewhat silent, extremely active in certain ro mantic ways, and handsome; above all, he was handsome. And now it was the night of the dance. He had not been, on close inspection in the front hall of the sorority, quite like the gentleman of the visions. But he was, quite unmistakably, a mem ber of the male group; and what more, she thought, could you ask to be standing in the middle of the front hall. They had, after leaving the sorority, been to a series of three cocktail parties. In spite of this It was still Saturday night. She had come to know College Capers... . ...from Coast to Coast by Tina Fisk Emerald Exchange Editor Cries of “Block that road!” “Cover that door!” and “Stop that car!” rang through the air that October day in 1936 when the students of La. State de clared a holiday. Professors and instructors were denied entrance to class rooms and campus . . . Mike was arriving. Some 6,006 strong, students marched to the town’s railway depot only to be disappointed. University officials, fearing a riot, had ordered Mike to be de livered to the campus baseball stadium. inis man i stop me siaiwaas though. That night a big pep rally was held . . . along with a torch light parade, and Mike the live tiger made his entrance as LSU’s official mascot. The 18-year-old tiger now weighs 450 pounds. The Daily Reville said that “some people get excited when he's hauled around in his cage.’’ But now he’s come into his own and at a game halftime he’s going to be awarded a varsity letter after making his usual entrance . . . to the strains of tiger rag. * * * The Syracuse Daily Orange tells about the latest rage for men . . . according to the Cen tral New York Men’s Wear Club, at least The club announced “Bare knees for men” next sum mer. Shorts for everyday wear are expected to be all the rage . . . whether men’s knees are “natty, knobby, or obnoxious.” • • « The Spartan Daily at San Jose State college says sometimes col lege pranks aren’t so funny as they may seem. “We got a call the other night to send a hearse to one of the fraternity houses,”’ an ambu lance driver said. “When we got there, the undertaker found it was a false alarm—somebody had a big laugh. It was supposed to be a joke. We didn’t think it was very funny.” He concluded by saying that "sometimes that little time wasted can cost a life.” * * * Here’s an item from the Pro script of the Richmond Profes sional Institute . . . "There are those who say it pays to worry— because the things they worry about seldom happen." • * * An all-expense paid trip to Hawaii is offered to the person selling the most season reserved tickets at Lewis and Clark col lege. The athletic department is sponsoring the trip which will be by plane the first week in De cember. * * • Coeds at Utah State college have been asked to refrain from wearing jeans in the classrooms. College officials say the girls should wear jeans only when milking cows. * • • A fish head from an 8-foot long fish that used to swim in waters covering Nebraska 60 million years ago is on display in La. State’s geology building. him well, during the cocktail parties. She knew the gentle quality of hid leer when one of her sorority Midler* hove into Night. She knew hiH unsteady gait toward the kitchen, and hid unerring sense of where the kitchen might be In a strange houMc. She had, Nhe decided,, come to know quite a lot about men, particularly men at cook tail partlcN. On the other hand, he had no become very well acquaint^ with her at all. His acquaintance seemed to be chiefly with one u more brown bottles named “Ole Troublesome,” or the like. Tlj real love affair was between th boy and the bottle; she was mur or less the chaperone. And no loo effective a one, at that. . "Old Troublesome," howevei proved to, be a fickle love tb bottle went dry. The last cock tail party ended rather soddonl), "X gesh theresh nothing to d buh go t'the dance,” her rfat. informed her mournfully. Thej went to the dance. The dance had some obscun theme involving a great deal •<* vegetation thrown around Us ground floor of the frateinH; house. Several couple* were \ ain ly attempting to dance to sort, music of indefinite beat and me] ody. One light was burning abov a group of chaperones. Then they were dancing. Hfih was not in his arms; he was In hers—it had to be that way in order to keep him topside and navigating. It was the house dance, the beautiful, ro mantic house dance. She said a bad word. "Wha you shay-" he askt< in his own charming way. "I was saying," she saii "what snappy decorations thes are, what a nice cocktail part that last one was, how well yp dance, and that I’ve never beo happier.” “All my datesh have a swe times," he said happily. It was a that moment that she lifted Lh skirt of lier off-the-shoulder, of1 the-back dress, extended oh foot, and swiftly kicked hir through the decorations an against the wall beyond. Tb band was playing "Good Nigh Sweetheart.” Better Safe Than Sorry “Say, Cas, some of the boys feel you’re making them warm up too long.”